phoenix

Huffington Post…

Todd S. Nelson arrived as chief executive at Education Management Corp. in 2007, after a two-decade career at the University of Phoenix. Altogether, four of Education Management’s top executives came from the University of Phoenix, a trend that has been repeated at numerous other corporations in the for-profit education industry. The chief executive of Grand Canyon Education Inc., which went public on Wall Street in 2008 and is also based in Phoenix, succeeded Nelson in 2006 as president of the Apollo Group. Bridgepoint Education Inc. , a San Diego corporation that owns two major online universities, went public in 2009 and is run by another team of former University of Phoenix executives. From HuffPost’s piece on Education Management Corp.: [Education Management Corp.'s] newly installed board, which included representatives from Goldman Sachs and the other private equity investors, sought a new team of executives to run the operations. They drew from the ranks of EDMC’s biggest competitor, the University of Phoenix. Chief among those new recruits was Todd S. Nelson, the longtime former chairman and chief executive of Phoenix’s parent company, the Apollo Group. Under Nelson, the University of Phoenix had become the unquestionable star of the for-profit higher education world, boasting more than 300,000 students and revenues topping $2.4 billion in 2006 — triple the revenues from five years earlier. But he left abruptly in 2006, after signing a $9.8 million settlement with the Department of Education over allegations of widespread recruiting violations at the school — allegations that have now resurfaced at EDMC. Read the entire story of the rise of Education Management Corp. here. Click on each company to see former University of Phoenix executives:

More:
Many For-Profit College Executives Got Their Start At The University of Phoenix [INFOGRAPHIC]

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Huffington Post…

The U.S. Justice Department and four states sued the nation’s second-largest for-profit college corporation on Monday, alleging in a wide-ranging complaint that Education Management Corp. violated federal laws by giving bonuses and raises to college recruiters based entirely on the number of students they enrolled. By unlawfully incentivizing its sales force to recruit as many students as possible, Pittsburgh-based EDMC also illegally took in federal student aid money by making false assurances to the government that its admissions counselors were complying with the government recruiting guidelines, the government alleged. “EDMC has created a ‘boiler room’ style sales culture and has made recruiting and enrolling new students the sole focus of its compensation system,” reads the complaint, filed by the Justice Department and attorneys general in Indiana, Illinois, Florida and California. Read the entire complaint The for-profit higher education industry has faced increased federal scrutiny over the past year amid increasing evidence that some schools are preying on disadvantaged students in an attempt to harness federal student aid dollars as profits. The company has taken in more than $11 billion in federal student aid dollars since July 1, 2003. Monday’s complaint represents one of the most direct challenges by the federal government to allegations of high-pressure recruiting tactics aimed at enrolling as many students as possible, regardless of whether they are likely to succeed. In a statement from EDMC’s legal counsel, the company denied that student enrollments were the only factor considered in compensating admissions employees. “EDMC worked closely with outside experts in both human resources and education law to develop a plan that required consideration of five quality factors along with enrollment numbers to determine salaries,” the statement read. “The complaint is wrong in its claim that EDMC disregarded the quality factors in the compensation plan. EDMC worked rigorously to ensure that the plan was properly implemented company-wide.” The complaint from the federal government notes that admissions employees were told to enroll students who were “unable to write coherently, applicants who appear … to be under the influence of drugs, and applicants for EDMC’s online programs who do not own computers.” To entice recruiters to enroll more students, EDMC created a “President’s Club” for the highest-performing recruiters, offering all-expenses paid trips to destinations such as Las Vegas, Cancun and Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Others were offered Pittsburgh Pirates baseball tickets, free passes to amusement parks and other gift cards based on the number of student enrollments secured, according to the complaint. For those who did not comply with a rigid performance matrix that tracked the number of enrollments per recruiter, the consequences were made clear. The complaint cites an e-mail from Gregg Schneider, a director of admissions at EDMC’s Art Institute Online, that chided admissions employees for not meeting recruitment goals in October 2006. “Each of you knows your plan for November,” the e-mail read. “This number is not a casual level that I want you to be at but rather a number that you must hit to have a good review, get promoted or keep your position here. This number is set by the VP of Admissions and the Director of Admissions.” E-mail from Gregg Schneider, director of admissions schneideremail The case emerged from a federal whistleblower lawsuit filed by a former employee in 2007. The Justice Department intervened in the case in May, and Monday’s complaint was the first look at what the government plans to present in court. The federal government and the four states are seeking a jury trial, and are asking for damages and a recovery of the federal funds. A number of top executives at EDMC, including chief executive officer Todd S. Nelson, moved to the company from the University of Phoenix, which paid $9.8 million to settle a similar dispute with the Department of Education over improper employee compensation. At issue in the case is whether EDMC violated the federal False Claims Act. In order to be eligible for federal student aid money, a school must comply with various consumer protection measures written into the Higher Education Act. One of those rules governs incentives that can be given to recruiters. After a series of problems in the 1980s involving fraudulent for-profit trade colleges, Congress banned schools from making “any commission, bonus or other incentive payment based directly or indirectly on success in securing enrollments or financial aid to any persons or entities engaged in any student recruiting or admission activities.” In 2002, the Department of Education under the George W. Bush administration added a series of “safe harbors” to the rules, which added language saying that salaries can be adjusted as long as they are “not based solely on the number of students recruited, admitted, enrolled, or awarded financial aid.” Critics argued that the addition of the word “solely” gave schools too much leeway in deciding how to dole out raises. The Obama administration has removed the “safe harbor” provisions from the recruiting rules, under new regulations that took effect in July.

See the rest here:
Justice Department, Four States Say For-Profit College Corporation Violated Federal Law

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Retailers Go Green: Ditching Paper And Emailing Receipts

July 9, 2011

Apple customers have been used to it for years, but now more retailers are following in the tech giant’s footsteps by emailing receipts to their customers. Big chain stores including Nordstrom and Gap have started offering e-receipts over the past few months and even small business are starting to embrace the environmentally friendly option as well, reports USA Today . In five years, up to 60 percent of retailers will go paperless, a Nordstrom spokesman told The Boston Herald . Those who can’t stand keeping a wallet full of receipts will be thrilled, but some consumers won’t see this as a good move. It takes more time as cashiers have to ask each customer for their email address and some view it as a ploy to market online directly to customers, says USA Today . It’s part of a growing effort by retailers to electronically reach out to consumers via their smartphones and computers. They send emails and text messages alerting consumers to deals. They have websites and Facebook pages and smartphone apps –all aimed at making the store more than just a bricks-and-mortar shop. Typically, emailed receipts will contain offers for consumers to receive coupons and other deals from retailers in the near future. But customers shouldn’t worry about stores abusing their email addresses, as it’s a service that’s more about offering something the customer will appreciate, John Talbott, assistant director of Indiana University’s Center for Education and Research in Retailing told USA Today. In 2008 Best Buy and Target began testing AllEtronic to provide customers with emailed receipts. The company boasts their service as “green” for helping to save the trees felled for about 600,00 tons of thermal receipt paper used by stores each year. And it takes 15 trees, 19,000 gallons of water and 390 gallons of oil to make one ton of paper, the company told CNET .

Read the full article →

Hedge Fund Manager Pays Back Trading Violation With Penalty

July 8, 2011

BOSTON – Former hedge fund manager Forrest Fontana, who once worked for industry titan Steven A. Cohen’s SAC Capital Advisors, will pay nearly $1 million to resolve claims that he violated a short-selling rule, the Securities and Exchange Commission said on Friday. Financial regulators charged that Fontana, whose Boston-based Fontana Capital LLC traded mostly in financial stocks, helped his investors earn unlawful profits of about $816,184 by having participated in public offerings after having shorted the same securities. According to the government Fontana violated Rule 105 of Regulation M, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said in an order imposing sanctions and a cease and desist order. Fontana broke the rule on three occasions between July 2008 through November 2008 with trades on XL Group PLC, Merrill Lynch, and Wells Fargo, the SEC said. He will now pay a disgorgement of $816,184, prejudgment interest of $3,606 and a civil penalty of $165,000 to the United States Treasury, the SEC said. Fontana’s lawyer was not immediately available for comment. The SEC has brought a number of these types of cases in the last months and only last week settled a similar matter with hedge fund Level Global, which has been embroiled in the government’s insider trading case. Fontana launched his own business in Boston in 2005 with $50 million in start-up capital from his former SAC boss, Cohen, and quickly generated buzz in the local investment community. But by 2010, he was effectively out of business, managing no funds for clients and concentrating on his work as one of five selectmen in the town of Winchester, north of Boston. (Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

Private Real Estate Investors Lending in Phoenix , Arizona …

June 4, 2011

http://www.lendinguniverse.com Find private real estate investors and lenders in Phoenix, Arizona to fund hard money loans residential, commercial land and.

Read the full article →

Asian Activities Report for June 1, 2011: Phoenix Gold (ASX:PXG) Doubled Mineral Resource To 526,000oz At Castle Hill Gold Project

June 1, 2011

Asian Activities Report for June 1, 2011: Phoenix Gold (ASX:PXG) Doubled Mineral Resource To 526,000oz At Castle Hill Gold Project

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (May 22-28)

May 27, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Dallas/Fort Worth, Denver, Los Angeles, New York City, Phoenix, San Francisco and South Florida. DENVER CBRE Taps Barrett as Global Corporate Services SVP Workplace strategy specialist Sharon Barrett joined CB Richard Ellis in Denver as senior vice president of global corporate services. The 25-year industry veteran is a former senior director at Cushman & Wakefield and founding…

Read the full article →

New Report: Nearly Half Of Chicago Mortgages Are Underwater

May 10, 2011

Newly released statistics show a mortgage crisis that is only deepening in the nation’s third-largest city, with staggering numbers of homeowners in dire straits. Almost half of mortgages in the greater Chicago area are now “underwater,” according to the study by Zillow. That means that homeowners owe more than the value of their homes, a product of plummeting housing prices. The proportion of underwater mortgages in Chicago, 45.7 percent, is eighth-highest among the nation’s 25 largest metropolitan areas, and pales in comparison to the devastating 68.4 percent of underwater mortgages in Phoenix, Arizona, the nation’s highest among big cities. But the speed with which underwater mortgages have grown in the area is much more disconcerting. Just last quarter, the figure was only 38.6 percent; a year ago, it was just under 32, reports Chicago Real Estate Daily . “Home value declines are currently equal to those we experienced during the darkest days of the housing recession,” Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries said in a press release accompanying the report. Prices were buoyed temporarily by the federal home-buyer tax credit, but with that credit’s expiry, the floor has again fallen out from under the market. Indeed, the Chicago Tribune reports that both home sales and prices dropped sharply in the first quarter . Sales were down 9.9 percent from a year ago, and the median price of a home was down to $155,000, down 11 percent from the same time a year ago.

Read the full article →

10 States Launch Investigation Into For-Profit Colleges

May 3, 2011

Top prosecutors in 10 states have convened a joint investigation into potential violations of consumer protection laws by for-profit colleges, Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway (D), who is leading the multi-state effort, said in an interview with The Huffington Post. The combined investigation only began within the past two months, but it comes after several state attorneys general launched individual probes of deceptive recruiting practices and possible misrepresentations to recruits regarding federal financial aid dollars. The multi-state probe is the latest sign that rapidly rising enrollments and an increased reliance on federal student aid dollars by for-profit colleges are attracting greater scrutiny of the industry. The for-profit higher education industry, which includes a vast swath of colleges ranging from the more than 400,000-student University of Phoenix to small mom-and-pop beauty schools, is facing intense scrutiny from the federal government due to growing federal student loan default rates at many schools. Although only about 10 percent of college students nationwide attend such for-profit institutions, the schools account for nearly half of all student loan defaults, leaving the government to pick up the tab. “A lot of people who are in Washington right now want to run around talking about fiscal responsibility,” said Conway, who issued subpoenas to six for-profit schools in Kentucky last year, seeking information on job placement claims made to prospective students and management of financial aid dollars. “Well, making certain that $25 billion in federal education dollars doled out is being spend in a way that appropriately trains people and prepares them for job opportunities that are out there … That, to me, is a fiscal responsibility issue.” Conway confirmed that 10 states so far have signed on to the multi-state working group. He declined to name the other states, but representatives for Attorneys General Tom Miller of Iowa (D), Lisa Madigan of Illinois (D) and Pam Bondi of Florida (R) confirmed that they are participating in the investigation. A spokesman for the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, Bob Cohen, said in a statement that the organization’s schools are “committed to putting students first” and enforcing existing federal and state laws. “We support a dialogue with the attorneys general that is based on hard facts, on principles fairly applied to all, and is not a product of ideology, innuendo or anecdote,” the statement said. “We firmly believe such a conversation will demonstrate that there is no systemic, sector-wide issue here.” At this point, Conway said, the primary goal is to share information and compare notes about violations of consumer protection statutes. But he said it is possible that the participating states could outline a joint agreement to require such schools to adhere to certain industrywide standards. “There need to be guidelines for information on cost and student loan debt provided to the students before they sign up, and we need to make sure that these schools reform the way they target and recruit potential students,” Conway said. He said the investigation so far involves civil violations, not criminal activity. But he did not rule out a criminal prosecution if investigators discover more information. There are precedents for multi-state settlements with state attorneys general, most notably in litigation against tobacco companies and in an agreement reached with state attorneys general and social networking sites meant to protect children against sexual predators. In 2008, 11 states reached an $8 billion settlement with Countrywide Financial to settle predatory lending allegations. And state attorneys general and the Obama administration are negotiating with the nation’s five largest mortgage companies to settle accusations of improper foreclosures and violations of consumer protection laws. “If you’ve got a school negotiating with 10 attorneys general, they snap to much faster than if they’re dealing with just one,” Conway said. Conway noted that unlike the tobacco industry, which was concentrated in a few major corporations, there are many smaller, independently-owned colleges throughout the country. The Department of Education has stepped up its scrutiny of for-profit colleges in the past year, proposing stronger federal regulations regarding bonuses or raises given to recruiters based on enrollment numbers . The department has also drafted rules regarding student loan accountability, which could cut off funding to programs with a track record of enrollees failing to pay back student loans and facing high debt loads. The industry has mounted an aggressive, multimillion-dollar lobbying campaign against the student loan regulations, saying they unfairly target for-profit colleges and would restrict college access to low-income students who attend such schools in large numbers. The multi-state investigation comes as the Department of Justice is also stepping up its involvement in litigation against for-profit colleges. This week, Education Management Corp. of Pittsburgh, the second-largest publicly traded college corporation, acknowledged that the U.S. Attorney of Western Pennsylvania had intervened in a civil case that had been brought against the company. Other states have also gotten intervened as parties in the case against Education Management Corp., which owns schools ranging from The Art Institutes to Argosy University. In a filing with the Securities Exchange Commission, the corporation noted, “The case alleges that the company’s compensation plans for admission representatives violated the Higher Education Act.” The company said it plans to “vigorously defend itself.”

Read the full article →

Golden Phoenix Joint Venture Partner Scorpio Gold Appoints Mine Manager for the Mineral Ridge Gold Deposit in Nevada

April 19, 2011

SPARKS, NV–(Marketwire – April 19, 2011) –  Golden Phoenix Minerals, Inc. (the “Company”) ( OTCBB : GPXM ) is pleased to announce that its joint venture partner Scorpio Gold Corp. (“Scorpio Gold”) has appointed James (Jim) W. Ashton, PEng, as mine manager at the Mineral Ridge gold deposit, Nevada, where the Company maintains a thirty percent (30%) interest via its membership interest in Mineral Ridge Gold, LLC; the joint venture entity that owns and operates the Mineral Ridge property with Scorpio Gold, effective immediately.

Read the full article →

Homebuilder Beazer Becoming Used-Home Landlord

April 6, 2011

Beazer Homes, one of the country’s largest homebuilders, is expanding beyond new home sales with the launch of a ‘Pre-Owned Homes’ division. Beginning in the Phoenix market that has a large inventory of distressed and foreclosed homes, the new division plans to acquire, improve and rent recently built, previously owned homes within select communities in markets in which the company currently operates. Having completed its first acquisitions…

Read the full article →

Southwest Flights Canceled: Thousands Inconvenienced, Airline Stands To Lose Millions

April 4, 2011

DALLAS — Southwest Airlines Co.’s decision to cancel about 300 flights Saturday inconvenienced thousands of passengers and may have cost the airline several million dollars in lost revenue. The damage to Southwest’s earnings would be reduced, however, if stranded passengers rebook on other Southwest flights rather than canceling their planned trip. The airline canceled the flights – more than 10 percent of its Saturday schedule – when it grounded nearly 80 planes of the same type that had a rupture in its fuselage after takeoff from Phoenix on Friday. The planes will undergo inspections of their aluminum skin. Southwest spokeswoman Linda Rutherford said it was too soon for the company to estimate the cost of grounding one-seventh of its fleet. She said Southwest might provide numbers later this month, when it releases its first-quarter earnings report. The grounded planes are 137-seat Boeing 737-300s. Using the airline’s most recent available figures for average occupancy, it’s possible to estimate that more than 31,000 paying passengers were stranded Saturday. Southwest says on its website, updated this week, that its average one-way fare is $130.27, which would produce a $4.1 million loss in revenue. However, such an estimate could be conservative because planes are more full in April than February, the last month for which Southwest occupancy numbers are available. Also, some of the canceled flights were to use slightly bigger versions of the 737. The estimate could also be too high for several reasons. Rutherford said Southwest tried to cancel flights with the fewest passengers – a standard practice when airlines must scrub flights. Also, Saturday flights may have fewer high-fare business travelers. Southwest had 2010 revenue of $12.1 billion. Whatever the cost of Saturday’s cancelations, Southwest faces a bigger problem if a large number of those grounded planes remain out of service into the work week. Recently, JetBlue Airways said it lost $30 million in revenue due to late-December storms that caused it to cancel 1,400 flights.

Read the full article →

Michelle Chen: Anti-Muslim Bias Examined on the Hill, Still Hidden in the Workplace

April 2, 2011

A few weeks ago, Rep. Peter King of Long Island stirred up simmering prejudices with congressional hearings on Islamic “radicalization” in the U.S., which yielded little actual information about security risks and spread plenty of misinformation about Muslim communities. This past week, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois tried to counterbalance King’s blatherfest with a hearing on Muslim Americans’ civil rights . And this time, we did learn something: the bias against Muslims takes many forms other than police harassment, unjust detention, or even the occasional bomb plot . Pervasive anti-Muslim and anti-Arab discrimination impacts people’s lives at the intersection of workplace rights and civil liberties. Employment discrimination surfaced as a key issue during the hearing—and a textbook example of the low-grade alienation that Muslim, South Asian and Arab communities encounter every day. Sen. Durbin noted in his introductory remarks , “Some have even questioned the premise of today’s hearing: that we should protect the civil rights of American Muslims. Such inflammatory speech from prominent public figures creates a fertile climate for discrimination.” As if on cue,

Read the full article →

Burns & McDonnell Names Pat Edwards as New General Manager of Burns & McDonnell Phoenix Regional Office

March 11, 2011

PHOENIX, AZ–(Marketwire – March 11, 2011) – Burns & McDonnell has named Pat Edwards, AIA, as General Manager of its rapidly growing regional office in Phoenix. Prior to joining Burns & McDonnell, Edwards served as Managing Principal for the Phoenix office of Jacobs/Carter & Burgess where he implemented a number of growth strategies focused on relationship-based consulting in architecture and engineering for federal, municipal, and commercial clients over a three-year period that approximately doubled the size of the office.

Read the full article →

Arizona Budget Cuts Target Potentially Life-Saving Care For Transplant Patients

March 6, 2011

PEORIA, Arizona (Reuters) – A pacemaker and defibrillator fitted to carpenter Douglas Gravagna’s failing heart makes even rising from the couch of his Phoenix-valley home a battle. But it is not congestive heart failure that is killing him, he says. It is a decision by Arizona Governor Jan Brewer to stop funding for some organ transplants as the state struggles to reduce a yawning budget deficit. “She’s signing death warrants — that’s what she’s doing. This is death for me,” says Gravagna, 44, a heavy-set man who takes 14 medications to stay alive. Gravagna is among 98 people denied state Medicaid funding for potentially life-saving transplants and at the forefront of a harrowing battle over the state’s public finances. The measure enacted last October by Brewer trimmed spending on Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program, to help close a projected 2012 budget deficit of $1.15 billion. It eliminated coverage for transplants including lung, heart, liver and bone marrow after weighing the success and survival rates for certain transplant procedures. Two patients on the Medicaid waiting list have since died, although it is unclear if transplants would have saved them. In a statewide speech, the Republican governor singled out the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, as the Medicaid program is called in the desert state, as the greatest drain on state coffers. “At the deficit’s core is the explosive growth in Medicaid spending which, over the last four years, has soared by almost 65 percent and now consumes 29 percent of our state budget,” she said. “If we are to regain control of state spending, we must reform Medicaid and free Arizona from the fiscal manipulation of the federal government,” Brewer said. CUTTING RATES TO PROVIDERS Medicaid, which covers about 60 million Americans — poor adults and children, people who are elderly or have disabilities — is one of the top expenses for states. It makes up about 16 percent of state budgets, said Judith Solomon at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. It pays for more than 40 percent of all births in the United States and is the primary bill-payer for nearly two-thirds of the country’s nursing home residents, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. In Texas the proposed budget would cut rates to Medicaid providers, including doctors, dentists, hospitals and nursing homes, by 10 percent, making it more difficult for patients to find healthcare providers who accept Medicaid. Other states, among them Nevada, Illinois, Mississippi, Nebraska, Colorado and South Dakota, have also proposed provider rate cuts. Proposed cuts range from limiting prescription and doctor visits in California to eliminating adult vision and dental services in Georgia, the center says. Brewer has proposed dropping about 250,000 Arizonans — mostly childless adults — from the program. Most states are not proposing to trim Medicaid rolls because the new federal health reform law requires that they maintain current Medicaid coverage. But the U.S. Health and Human Services Department has said Arizona can drop coverage because the state is providing it through a temporary waiver, and the new law does not require extending that. ‘OTHER PLACES TO MAKE CUTS’ Taking an ax to transplant funding is backed by many Republicans in Arizona, some of who sympathize with Brewer. “It’s a very difficult unenviable position to be in for her,” said Kathy Boatman, a conservative Tea Party activist in the Phoenix valley. “It’s not fun, it’s unpleasant, but when expenses have outpaced income, that’s what you have to do.” But opponents, including state Democrats, the families of desperately sick patients like Gravagna and some doctors say savings can be made without putting lives on the line. “There are other places to make cuts. We’ve cut taxes on the very rich, we have corporate tax loopholes,” said Bruce Madison, a doctor who spoke at a rally to restore transplant funding in Phoenix on Saturday. Madison received a life-saving heart transplant six years ago. State Representative Anna Tovar, a Democrat and former kindergarten teacher, received two transplants to combat a rare form of leukemia. She says Arizona stands to lose more than $3 million a year in federal matching funds for Medicaid to save $1.4 million a year by restricting transplants. “When you look at the big scheme of things, saving $1.4 million for 96 lives is not money well spent,” said Tovar, who has introduced four bills seeking to restore Medicaid funding for transplants. As he grows sicker after being denied a liver transplant last year, Francisco Felix, 32, says any savings from denying him the operation are in some measure a false economy. “If I got a transplant, I could get back to work … pay my taxes, and help Arizona to get back on its feet,” he said at the rally. (Additional reporting by Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by Xavier Briand) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

State And Local Budget Cuts Are Slowing U.S. Economy

February 26, 2011

WASHINGTON — Deep spending cuts by state and local governments pose a growing threat to an economy that is already grappling with high unemployment, depressed home prices and the surging cost of oil. Lawmakers at state capitols and city halls are slashing jobs and programs, arguing that some pain now is better than a lot more later. But the cuts are coming at a price – weaker growth at the national level. The clearest sign to date was a report Friday on U.S. gross domestic product for the final three months of 2010. The government lowered its growth estimate, pointing to larger-than-expected cuts by state and local governments. The report suggested that worsening state budget problems could hold back the recovery by putting more people out of work and reducing consumer spending. Across the country, governors and lawmakers are proposing broad cutbacks – lowering fees paid to nursing homes in Florida, reducing health insurance subsidies for lower-income Pennsylvanians, closing prisons in New York state and scaling back programs for elderly and disabled Californians. “The massive financial problems at the state and local levels have and will continue to restrain growth,” said economist Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors. State and local governments account for 91 percent of all government spending on primary education, according to the Brookings Institution. And they provide 71 percent of higher-education spending. States also account for more than 70 percent of spending on roads, bridges and other infrastructure. But those same governments cut spending at a 2.4 percent rate at the end of last year. And economists predict they will slash their budgets by up to 2.5 percent this year – potentially the sharpest reduction since 1943. The deepest cuts are expected to occur in the first six months of this year. The worst cuts so far_ 3.8 percent – came in the January-to-March period of 2010. That was the sharpest quarterly drop since late 1983, when the U.S. economy was recovering from a severe recession. Most economists think the cutbacks this year will exert an even bigger economic drag than last year. Newly elected Republican governors are leading the charge. They’re acting on campaign pledges to shrink government to meet budget gaps. They favor smaller governments with lower taxes and less regulation, which they say will boost private-sector growth and job creation. Some Democrats – including Govs. Andrew Cuomo of New York and Jerry Brown of California – have followed suit. They’re pushing for cuts to social programs and concessions from unions. The governors’ push for painful cuts comes just as they gather in Washington this weekend for their winter meeting. “We have to balance our budgets. We have to address costs. And we also have to move forward at the same time,” Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, head of the Democratic Governors Association, said after his group met with President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden at the White House. No state has attracted more attention than Wisconsin. Pointing to the state’s projected $3.6 billion gap, Republican Gov. Scott Walker wants to strip state workers of collective bargaining rights. He also wants them to contribute more to their pensions and health insurance costs. The budget fight has taken center stage in Congress. Democrats are bending to Republican demands for spending cuts to avoid a shutdown of the federal government next week. The reduction in federal spending has a direct effect on states and municipalities. They depend on money from Washington to keep schools operating, put police officers on the street and subsidize public services like job training. The end of federal stimulus programs is also widening state deficits. Many governors, including those in Florida, New York and Colorado, are pursuing tighter budgets. Their proposals include laying off public workers and teachers, reducing spending for education and health care, and ending some social services. They’re also targeting public pension funds and health insurance plans and seeking larger contributions from public employees. State and local budget experts fear the cutbacks will intensify this year. States are struggling to close budget gaps of about $125 billion for the upcoming budget year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. That’s a smaller gap than states faced in the past two years. But this time, governors won’t have federal stimulus funds to help close the deficits. And state governments, in turn, are reducing the aid they send to local governments. “We suspect that these cutbacks are going to deepen over the next couple of quarters,” said Mark Muro, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “It’s likely we’re only beginning to see the state and local drag.” In Florida, newly elected Republican Gov. Rick Scott wants to reduce the state’s budget 5 percent. To get there, he wants to slash 8,600 state jobs and reduce Medicaid costs through a 5 percent cut in fees paid to hospitals and nursing homes, but not doctors. Health-insurance cuts are popular with many Republican governors. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett, facing a projected $4 billion-plus deficit, said he can’t find the cash to extend a program that subsidizes health care for 41,000 lower-income adults and is nearly out of money. Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer is suggesting that the state drop Medicaid coverage for 250,000 low-income people to make up about half of the state’s projected shortfall of about $1 billion. It’s not just Republicans demanding tough fiscal medicine. In New York, Gov. Cuomo has said up to 9,800 state employees could be laid off if public-employee unions don’t agree to millions of dollars in concessions. The newly elected Democrat has also proposed $1 billion in cuts to New York’s Medicaid program, with its 4.7 million recipients. He also wants to close some prisons, freeze wages for nearly 200,000 state workers, cut $1.5 billion in aid to public schools and chop 10 percent from the state’s operating budget. In California, Brown has imposed a state hiring freeze and is proposing cuts to a host of social programs that serve the poor, elderly and disabled. He is also seeking more than $12 billion in tax extensions and fees. The state is grappling with a $26.6 billion fiscal crisis. State spending represents just a fraction of the nation’s economic activity. Consumers typically spend roughly six times more than state and local governments do. So a big increase in consumer spending can offset public-sector cuts. U.S. consumers boosted spending at a 4.1 percent annual rate in the final quarter of 2010 year; state and local governments cut spending at a 2.4 percent pace. If consumers had spent just 0.4 percentage point more, they would have offset the state and local government cutbacks. That said, layoffs hurt consumer spending. And states and local governments are cutting their payrolls. State and local governments have cut more than 400,000 jobs in the past two years. Budget pressures will force an average of 20,000 more job cuts each month for the rest of this year, estimates Jon Shure of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank. State tax revenue has begun to grow again after falling sharply in recent years. But many governors are now proposing tax cuts as a way to encourage business activity, Shure said. That’s likely to escalate pressure for spending cuts because most states must balance their budgets each year. ___ Contributing to this story were Associated Press writers Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington; Sandra Chereb in Carson City, Nev.; Juliet Williams in Sacramento, Calif.; Paul Davenport in Phoenix; Geoff Mulvihill in Haddonfield, N.J.; Michael Virtanen in Albany, N.Y.; Colleen Slevin in Denver; Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa.; Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C.; Bill Kaczor in Tallahassee, Fla.; and Jonathan Cooper in Salem, Ore.

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (Feb. 13-19)

February 18, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland/Northern Ohio, Columbus, Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston, National, New York City, Orange County, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Richmond and San Antonio. AUSTIN, DALLAS/FORT WORTH, HOUSTON, SAN ANTONIO Veteran Investors Form State of TX Real Estate Fund Veteran commercial real estate investors Mark Jordan and Kevin White formed the State of Texas…

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (Feb. 6-12)

February 11, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Chicago, Columbus, Boston, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Sacramento, San Antonio, Tampa/St. Petersburg and Washington, DC. SAN ANTONIO, HOUSTON USAA Real Estate Appoints New President, COO Len O’Donnell (pictured, right) joined USAA Real Estate Co. as president and chief operating officer. He will manage operations for the San Antonio…

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (Jan. 30-Feb.5)

February 4, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Baltimore, New York City, Seattle, Portland, Phoenix, Tucson and Washington, DC. ATLANTA Perman Brings Medical Office Team to Grubb & Ellis Todd Perman (pictured, right), the founder and former head of Healthcare Real Estate Advisors in Atlanta, joined Grubb & Ellis Co. in Atlanta. He was appointed senior vice president in the office group to focus on medical buildings, and…

Read the full article →

Investigators Accused Of ‘Malpractice’ In Report On For-Profit Colleges

February 2, 2011

A lobbying group representing the for-profit college industry filed a lawsuit today accusing federal government investigators of “professional malpractice” after issuing a report last summer that documented aggressive and misleading recruitment at several for-profit institutions. The undercover investigation by the Government Accountability Office, which involved four investigators posing as fictitious prospective students, found numerous examples of deceptive statements made by admissions officers and other employees at 15 for-profit colleges. The findings included overstated promises of potential salaries after graduation and high-pressure tactics that pressed applicants to enroll before receiving information about financial aid. The for-profit college industry in recent months has seized on revisions made to the report in November – changes that in many cases represent technical tweaks and elaborations, but that the industry says have “cast serious doubt on the credibility and objectivity of the GAO’s analysis.” The report garnered great attention when it was released last August, causing stock prices to plunge at many of the publicly-traded corporations that own for-profit schools. The for-profit college sector includes a diverse array of schools, ranging from specialized institutions such as ITT Technical Institute to mostly-online colleges such as the University of Phoenix and Kaplan University. Chuck Young, a spokesman for the GAO said the revisions in no way undermine the overall message of the report, and that the agency stands by its findings. According to Young, an independent GAO review team examined the report after it was published and “found no material flaws in the evidentiary support for the overall message.” The lawsuit — filed by the Coalition for Educational Success, represented by Washington lobbyist Lanny Davis — is the latest example of an intense campaign the for-profit colleges are waging against new federal regulations that could restrict their access to lucrative federal student aid dollars. Industry groups have filed a flurry of lawsuits against the Department of Education and conducted an advertising blitz accusing the government of trying to prevent students from going to college. Davis, a former special counsel to President Bill Clinton, began representing the for-profit college sector last year. He has faced criticism in recent years over his paid representation of controversial international figures, including Laurent Gbagbo, the Ivory Coast dictator who refused to step down after losing an election last year. Davis dropped Gbagbo as a client soon after taking him on in December, following complaints from human rights groups. The for-profit college industry faces increased scrutiny as evidence mounts of its students leaving with debts they cannot afford to pay, given the low-wage jobs they tend to attain after graduation. For-profit schools enroll about 12 percent of students nationwide, yet the sector takes in nearly 25 percent of all student aid dollars and is responsible for 43 percent of student loan defaults. A number of the alterations to the GAO report cited in the lawsuit involved wording changes and statements made by recruiters to the fictitious students that were omitted from the first report. For example, in the original report, the GAO noted how a representative at a two-year college in California told the undercover applicant getting a job is a “piece of cake” and graduates of the computer drafting program could make more than $120,000 per year. The revised report added that the employee also said in the current economic environment, the job applicant could expect a job earning $15 per hour, if lucky. However, during the same interview, the representative also encouraged the student to falsely fill out a federal student aid form in order to qualify for Pell Grants. There were no revisions to that conclusion. In another case, the original report said a recruiter at a publicly-traded four-year college in Pennsylvania told an applicant she “should” take out the maximum in federal student loans, even if she didn’t need all of the money for tuition. The revised version of the report changed the wording to “could.” The lawsuit names a series of other tweaks made to the report, suggesting that “pervasive and one-sided errors resulted from the intentional bias driving the investigation, in violation of the GAO’s protocols.” GAO has not discounted any of the conclusions of its report, and the vast majority of the findings required no tweaks or revisions. Some of the more misleading statements included a recruiter in Washington, D.C., telling an applicant a barber can earn between $150,000 and $250,000 per year, even though the Bureau of Labor Statistics pegs 90 percent of barbers’ salaries below $43,000 per year. Another employee at a college in Florida sat coaching an undercover applicant while she took a proficiency test. The same recruiter implied a student did not have to pay back student loans, even though federal student aid is a debt that often cannot be discharged even in bankruptcy. The lawsuit notes that the GAO’s “malpractice and negligence” with the report forced the group to take on “substantial costs and expenses” to set the record straight. The Coalition for Educational Success has been pursuing a separate lawsuit against the Department of Education over access to e-mail records discussing proposed industry regulations. Another group representing the industry, the Association for Private Sector Colleges and Universities, filed a lawsuit last month against the Department of Education seeking to undo consumer protection regulations approved last fall. The disputed rules included guidelines meant to prevent misleading and deceptive pitches by recruiters and measures prohibiting bonuses awarded to recruiters based on the number of student enrollments they secure.

Read the full article →

For-Profit Colleges Selling Students On High-Risk Loans, Consumer Group Says

February 1, 2011

Many of the large corporations that own for-profit colleges are increasingly issuing their own in-house private loans to students — even though some schools expect more than 50 percent of such loans to go into default, according to a report released this week by the National Consumer Law Center. Through the eyes of those who run for-profit schools, the risky sideline lending business enables them to satisfy a federal law that requires at least 10 percent of a school’s revenue to come from sources other than federal financial aid. By complying with the 10-percent requirement, schools can then access the lucrative 90 percent of revenue that comes from the federal government. Federal student-aid dollars have been the lifeblood of the for-profit education sector, allowing the industry to more than triple the number of student enrollments over the past decade — far outpacing the growth of private and public traditional universities. That growth has come amid questionable outcomes for its students, who default on student loans at twice the rate of their counterparts at public universities. Several of the schools in the for-profit sector derive more than 85 percent of their revenues from federal student aid, putting them perilously close to the 90-percent threshold and placing schools at risk of losing access to the wellspring of federal aid. Executives at for-profit colleges are often quizzed about compliance with the rule during conference calls with investors, and schools take great pains to satisfy the 10-percent requirement. Private loans have traditionally offered a way for schools to beef up the 10 percent of revenue in the non-federal category, according to the report. But since the credit crisis began in 2007 and ’08, third-party lenders such as traditional banks and student lending giants like Sallie Mae have been largely unwilling to lend to for-profit school students, citing the high default rates and bad credit scores for the typically lower-income students who attend such institutions. So several schools have stepped in with their own loan programs, many of which lack the fixed-interest rates and more flexible repayment options that come with federal student loans, according to the report. “School executives could have viewed the pull-out of the third-party creditors as a warning sign that lending without regard to repayment caused significant harm to their students,” reads the report by the National Consumer Law Center, an advocacy group that works with low-income populations. “Instead, many proprietary school executives chose to create or expand institutional loan products … even though their students were already struggling with student loan debt.” Most federal student loans are capped at rates of 6.8 percent or lower. For a newly created private loan program at ITT Technical Institute, rates can range anywhere from 4.75 percent to 14.75 percent interest, depending on a student’s credit score. Interest rates can adjust over time, and can range as high as 25 percent, according to ITT documents in the report. DeVry offers loans with 12 percent annual interest that require students to make payments while they are enrolled, according to the company’s loan documents. The remainder of the balance is due within a year after graduation, and cannot be deferred. Supporters of the for-profit sector don’t dispute that internal lending has increased since the credit crisis. But they argue that such loans are necessary to fill in the financial gap for students who cannot afford the cost of school on their own. “We believe that students should have an option to go to school,” said Harris Miller, president and chief executive of the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, a lobbying group for the industry. “We’re willing to take a chance on students. Unfortunately, many private lenders are not willing to do that today, unless you’re already upper-middle-class, which is not where most of our students are.” The so-called “90/10 rule” has been a flashpoint in the debate on the for-profit education sector. Critics of the industry argue that the regulation creates incentives for schools to game the system by increasing tuition to a point where students will have to come up with out-of-pocket expenses to satisfy the 10-percent category. The Consumer Law Center report asserts that schools are satisfying the non-federal income by increasing such institutional loans, even though some institutions expect more than 50 percent of the loans to eventually default. “The schools seem to view these loans more as ‘loss leaders’ to keep the federal dollars flowing,” the report states. “However, the view from the student perspective is much different. Students do not care if the high default rates help the companies maintain high tuitions and present a more attractive front to investors. Each charge-off represents an individual who cannot repay a debt and who may be facing aggressive collection tactics.” Scrutiny of the for-profit education sector has increased in recent years, as evidence mounts that many institutions are leaving students with debts they cannot afford to pay, given the low-wage jobs they tend to attain after graduation. For-profit schools enroll about 12 percent of students nationwide, yet the sector takes in nearly 25 percent of all student aid dollars and is responsible for 43 percent of student loan defaults. Average tuition at for-profit schools is nearly twice that of the in-state tuition at four-year public colleges, and more than five times the average tuition at community colleges, according to a Senate report released last year. For-profit schools have argued that the higher proportion of student loan defaults is an outgrowth of the students they tend to attract: a lower-income population that, according to the industry, is often overlooked by traditional nonprofit colleges. Critics point to the extraordinary growth of the industry, largely at the expense of taxpayers, despite the questionable outcomes and high debt loads for students. Average annual profits for the for-profit sector grew 81 percent between 2005 and 2009, according to a report last year by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. Schools in the for-profit sector run the gamut from specialized course offerings such as Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts, run by the publicly traded Career Education Corp., to the mostly online University of Phoenix, owned by the Apollo Group. Deanne Loonin, the staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center who wrote the report, noted that much of the information on private loans to students granted by colleges was difficult to obtain. Most of the data was limited to what was disclosed in quarterly reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in earnings calls with investors. The report mentioned Corinthian Colleges Inc., which runs Everest College, which has more than 100 campuses across the U.S. and Canada. In 2007, the company took in 13 percent of its revenues from private loans – mostly from Sallie Mae, one of the nation’s largest student lenders. But Sallie Mae shut down lending to students at Corinthian and many other for-profit schools in 2008, because most of the potential borrowers did not represent good bets. So the school has ramped up internal student lending ever since, even though executives at the company in 2009 told investors on an earnings conference call that they expected default rates of more than 50 percent on such loans. Despite the anticipated high default rates, schools are still able to count some revenues from internal loans toward the 10 percent category to comply with federal rules. Congress passed a temporary measure in 2008 that allowed schools to count a portion of such loans as non-federal revenues through July 2012. Corinthian executives have also mentioned the possibility of increasing tuition to comply with the 90/10 rule. The idea is that increasing tuition would create a larger gap between the total cost of the program and what students are eligible for from federal financial aid programs — thus driving students toward the college’s in-house loans. In a November conference call, former chief executive Peter Waller said the company was “calmly evaluating whether to institute a substantial price increase in the third quarter of fiscal 2011.” He noted that “we do not believe such a price increase is in the best interest of our students,” according to a transcript of the call. Waller resigned later in November as chief executive. A spokesman for Corinthian, Kent Jenkins, said the loans offered by the company have the same interest rates as federal student loans – a maximum of 6.8 percent interest – and are intended to allow low-income students with very few other borrowing options to attend school. He called the report from the National Consumer Law Center “an advocacy document” and noted that the group has supported tighter regulations on for-profit colleges. Jenkins also noted that the 90/10 rule created a “catch-22″ for for-profit schools, discouraging schools from lowering tuition in order to comply with the 10 percent requirement. “We can’t lower tuitions because we would simply be in further violation of the requirement,” Jenkins said. “We’re in a position where our program may be about the cost of a year’s worth of financial aid for some students. So in fact, the amount of student loans may be 100 percent of the cost of the program.” A spokesman for DeVry, which was also mentioned in the report, said the company’s loan programs are a “valuable service” for students, and that less than a third of DeVry’s students carried a balance after the first year. Miller, who heads the lobbying group for the for-profit sector, said he agreed that the 90-percent regulation often created “perverse incentives” for schools to raise tuition in order comply with the rule. “It’s creating a disincentive to control costs,” Miller said. “You’re incentivizing a school to raise tuition, not because they actually need to raise tuition but because they need to create a gap between the maximum student aid a student is eligible for, and the tuition.”

Read the full article →

Dan Dorfman: The Man Who Turns Water Into Gold

January 22, 2011

When we’re young, we build castles in the sand. And when we grow up, some of us build empires. One fella intimately familiar with the empire-building process, a relatively unknown name to the masses, unlike such nationally known empire builders as Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, is 67-year-old Dick Heckmann. Not only has he done it before, but he’s busily engaged in pursuing an encore. “I want to be an $800 million gorilla again,” says Heckmann, a one-time Fuller brush man who’s convinced he’s off to a solid start in achieving that goal. The Old Testament says dream no small dreams, and that surely applies to our would-be gorilla, not only an achiever who dreams big, but one who doggedly follows up with the necessary action to make sure his dreams will come true. That was the case in 1990 when Heckmann, together with the aid of a secretary, founded United States Filter Corp., a New York Stock Exchange-listed company that treated waste water and water that went into manufactured products. Though the subsequent acquisition of 260 water firms and internal growth, he built a booming business with annualized revenues of $5 billion over the next nine years that was sold in 1999 to Vivendi for $8.2 billion. In the process, the sales of U.S. Filter under Heckmann’s leadership doubled every year for nine straight years, while the company’s shares ballooned from $0.75 to $33. So any investor who plunked down a few bucks on Heckmann wound up making a bundle as he literally turned water into gold. The latest project for Heckmann, who has amassed an estimated net worth of about $200 million, which includes a part ownership in the Phoenix Suns basketball team, is big board listed Heckmann Corp. Launched in November 2008 and headquartered in Palm Desert, CA., it buys and builds companies in the water sector. Once again, our empire builder is off and running. In a little more than two years, Heckman has developed a host of water-related businesses and has become a dominant player in water treatment related to energy (notably getting rid of excess water coming out of gas wells). Among the operations and investments are a 100% ownership of China Water & Drinks, one of the largest suppliers of water to Coca-Cola in China, a 100%-owned produced water pipeline and disposable company based in Tyler, Texas, a 50% ownership of a water solutions company, a joint venture between Heckman Corp. and big board-listed Energy Transfer Partners L.P., and a 7% stake in Underground Solutions, a supplier of PVC pipe with patented technologies. You can invest in chips, toys, cars and steel, Heckmann notes, and everyone knows the name of the biggest player. But not so, he points out, in water, which is probably a trillion-dollar business and is the only industry he knows in which he wouldn’t have to fight an 800-pound gorilla. Heckmann aims to fill the void. Within five years, he figures, his firm will be the largest independent pure water company in the U.S. and the only one at that time with annual sales of more than $1 billion. Maybe so, but he’s got a long way to go. In its first full operating year (2009), Heckmann Corp. posted sales of $35 million, accompanied by a whopping $395 million loss. Late last year, the company acquired a firm with $70 million of sales, raising overall volume to $105 million. Heckmann wouldn’t discuss 2011 prospects, but expectations in some quarters have it that the company, which is believed to have turned profitable in last year’s fourth quarter, will record $140 million in sales this year and an EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of about $20 million. At the moment, says Heckmann, the company has $200 million in cash, no debt and a team that has done it before (a reference to his hiring of a number of former U.S. Filter employees). An obvious question: Why, given his age and his hefty net worth, is Heckmann looking to build another empire? “Because,” he quipped, “I started playing golf, I’m never going to make the senior tour, and I love the water business.” Whether indeed Heckmann can pull off a spectacular encore is anybody’s guess. At least some market players are skeptical, as evidenced by the company’s stock performance (the firm went public at $8 a share, rose to as high as $10.74 and is now selling at $4.96). Likewise, there is a current short interest (a bet the stock price will fall) of more than 3 million of the company’s roughly 108 million shares outstanding. “Heckmann is a big maybe and this is the wrong environment for maybes,” says one short seller, who is making money on his Heckmann short position. Neil Weisman, a former hedge fund manager who ran Chilmark Capital between 1987 and 1993 and turned in some dazzling showings, disagrees. “Heckmann is only in the second inning,” says Weisman, who expects strong growth and the shares to trade north of $10 over the next 12 months. Apparently, he’s putting his money where his mouth is, reportedly holding, I’m told, somewhere between 2 and 3 million shares in his own personal account. As Weisman sees it, “H20 is the way to go and Heckmann is the best way to do it.” What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com .

Read the full article →

CoStar Q&A: Rich Walter of Faris Lee On Opportunities for Retail Investors

January 19, 2011

Faris Lee Investments, an advisory and brokerage firm specializing in retail real estate, recently added senior-level brokers and opened offices in several markets as part of a national expansion, including new offices in Phoenix, Las Vegas, Atlanta and Orlando. The Irvine, CA-based firm plans to extend into other markets as well. Faris Lee Investments President Rich Walter, who has more than 30 years experience in the commercial real estate and…

Read the full article →

David Fenton: Upside Down on Clean Energy

November 18, 2010

In America today, the truth is upside down on clean energy. I believe this is the primary reason we lost climate legislation in the Senate. Perception is reality, and reality is upside down. Upside down. We have allowed ourselves to be successfully tarred as the people who will hurt the economy by the fossil fuel forces who will guarantee the economic decline of America. As long as we are defined as the people who are going to raise everyone’s energy bills, we will not succeed politically. And that’s what we are now in the energy debate in Washington. Upside down. As clean energy transformation is the best — it may be the only — path to strong economic and job growth, including rebuilding our industrial base and economic competitiveness. As the British economist Nicholas Stern has said of clean energy, “these investments will play the role of the railways, electricity, the motor car and information technology in earlier periods of economic history.” Clean energy transformation, if properly financed and combined with energy-saving technologies, will lead to lower energy bills for Americans than our current path, as McKinsey and others have repeatedly demonstrated. Lower net bills, cheaper transportation and price stability. Upside down. Because sticking to fossil fuel business as usual will cause the economic decline of America. It will lead to much higher gasoline and food prices as world demand increases, losing the next industrial wave to China and Korea, the transfer of our wealth to the Middle East, trillions more for resource wars, and the enormous costs of climate adaptation and climate disruption. Sea walls, droughts, floods, snowpack loss, loss of agriculture and drinking water — not exactly economic benefits. Upside down. You know it. I know it. But we don’t talk this way. We are on the economic defensive, and it’s our own fault. We can’t win if we’re the people who will hurt the economy. It’s time that we became the pro-growth forces, and painted the tiny group of companies standing in the way, and their political apologists, as ANTI-GROWTH. Because that’s what they are. Anti-growth for everyone but themselves. The Wall Street Journal — anti-growth. John Boehner and Mitch McConnell — anti-growth. Exxon, Peabody, the Koch brothers, Midwestern utilities, BP, Chevron, Rupert Murdoch, Sarah Palin — all in the way of a better economic future for America. All leading us to further industrial decline, decaying infrastructure, job loss, and higher food and gas prices. We have the facts to show it. When are we going to tell our story? When are we going to stop relying mostly on quietly presenting facts to officials in person or speaking largely to the converted. When are we going to seize the economic initiative in the public and Washington discourse? Recently, I had lunch with a top editor of one of America’s leading news organizations. I mentioned that it has been true for many years now that rooftop solar electricity is cost-effective in most of the country for new homes when financed by the home mortgage. The editor accused me of distortion, because “everybody knows solar is too expensive.” But I’m right — it’s been true for many years, even at higher interest rates than now. Why doesn’t this editor know? You can’t blame the editor. It’s our fault. Of course we also have to put the climate and Congressional skeptics on the defensive, explain and defend the science, and challenge the media to stop featuring industry propagandists and skeptical bloggers as equal to published, peer-reviewed climate scientists. Of course we need Californians and residents of Phoenix and Las Vegas to understand their irrigation and drinking water days are numbered. Washingtonians to visualize the inevitable flooding of the nation’s monuments and many weeks of over 95 degree temperatures. Chicagoans to expect heat wave deaths in the thousands like France. Farmers to understand what’s coming. But if we don’t show that our path leads to prosperity, and theirs to economic decline, we won’t win politically, we won’t get the R&D and investments funds the industry needs, we won’t end fossil fuel subsidies, restore the jobs of Americans and we will still be trying to get a price on carbon five years from now or even longer. So let’s get started. It’s time to turn things rightside up for our country. Adapted from my remarks at the Sierra Club Climate Solutions Summit, November 18, 2010, San Francisco.

Read the full article →

Amazon Hiring Thousands To Help Fill Holiday Orders

November 12, 2010

NEW YORK — Amazon.com Inc. said Friday it is hiring more than 15,500 people to fill temporary holiday jobs at shipping centers around the country, more than it hired last year. The online retail giant said in news releases that it will hire more than 5,000 people in Phoenix and Goodyear, Ariz., and 4,000 in Pennsylvania at locations including Allentown, Hazleton and Lewisberry. In Indiana, it will hire more than 2,500 people in Whitestown and Plainfield, and it will hired more than 2,000 each in Hebron, Ky. and Fernley, Nev. The Seattle company said it is hiring more people this year than last but not how many more. Many retailers are increasing their hiring this season. Kohl’s Corp., Macy’s Inc., Toys R Us, Pier 1 Imports Inc., American Eagle Outfitters Inc. and others plan to hire more temporary holiday workers. Retailers will add between 550,000 and 650,000 jobs this holiday season, according to an updated forecast from the national outsourcing firm Challenger, Gray and Christmas. That’s significantly more than the 501,400 added last year. But it’s still well below the 720,800 added in 2007 as the recession began. About 10 percent of U.S. holiday sales are made online, but the sector is growing fast. Research firm comScore Inc. expects it to grow 7 to 9 percent compared with a year ago, when online holiday sales were 4 percent higher than the previous year. Earlier this month Amazon.com also announced thousands of temporary holiday jobs in Campbellsville and Lexington, Ky. and Las Vegas. The company has 31,200 permanent employees worldwide. Shares fell $4.55 or 2.7 percent to $165.82 on Friday.

Read the full article →

Video: Rosen Says Brazil Capital Inflows Pose a `Danger’: Video

November 9, 2010

Nov. 8 (Bloomberg) — Bret Rosen, a Latin America debt strategist at Standard Chartered Bank, and John Licata, chief commodity strategist at Blue Phoenix Inc., talk about their investment strategies for Latin America. Rosen and Licata also discuss commodity markets, Brazil’s presidential election and Argentina’s economy. They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

For-Profit College Shares Tumble

November 4, 2010

NEW YORK — Shares of for-profit schools dove Thursday after a seemingly routine program review by the Department of Education reawakened fears of greater oversight – and lower profits – in the sector. Several analysts also sounded warnings, concerned about their ability to sign up new students and access government-backed financial aid due to increased scrutiny. Apollo Group Inc., which owns the University of Phoenix, the country’s largest for-profit higher education chain, said on Thursday that the DOE is launching a review of how Phoenix administers federal financial aid. The announcement comes not even five months after the conclusion of another review which cost the school $1.8 million in repayments. The new review will cover the period from the 2009-2010 aid year up to the present. Program reviews are fairly common, and the launch of a review doesn’t mean a school has violated financial aid rules. Yet back-to-back reviews in the past would have unusual, said UBS analyst Ariel Sokol. “The perception perhaps has been that the DOE.has been asleep at the wheel” regarding oversight of the schools, he said. “In that context, it’s not surprising.” A Government Accountability Office report in August found misleading recruitment practices at 15 schools, which the DOE said it could use to act upon. Such reviews could result in fines or restricted access to government-backed financial aid, which makes up the bulk of the schools’ revenues. The University of Phoenix program review “is the initial evidence of an increased enforcement regime” at the Education Department, said Signal Hill analyst Trace Urdan in a research note. Critics claim the schools are not helping students find better jobs and say enrollment counselors sign up many who are unprepared for higher education. When students drop out, they are still stuck paying back their student loans – unless they default, and then the bill goes to the taxpayers. Defaults on student loans, most of which are supplied by the government, have been rising throughout the recession. One DOE proposal is called a “gainful employment” rule that could limit schools’ access to federal financial aid if graduates’ debt levels are too high or too few students repay loans. It was supposed to be announced by Nov. 1, but intense lobbying from the for-profit sector helped delay finalization until 2011. The DOE held a public hearing on the rule Thursday. School chains, including Apollo, have been warning investors that they expect student enrollments to drop as they accommodate new rules. Apollo shares tumbled $2.91, or 7.6 percent, to $35.56 in afternoon trading. Shares of Corinthian Colleges Inc. fell more than 11 percent, hitting a new 52-week low, after a downgrade from UBS. The company said that it may have to raise tuition or risk violating government rules on how much of its revenue can come federal financial aid. It also expects a big drop in new student enrollments. DeVry Inc. shares dropped 4 percent, while Grand Canyon Education Inc., which was downgraded by Baird, fell nearly 6 percent. ITT Educational Services Inc. fell more than 3 percent, as did American Public Education Inc. Bridgepoint Education Inc., Capella Education Co., Strayer Education Inc., Career Education Corp. and the Washington Post Co., which owns the Kaplan school chain, all had share declines of 2 percent to 3 percent. Education Management Corp. shares bucked the trend after a better-than-expected earnings report, rising $1.22, or 10.5 percent, to $12.95. (This version corrects misspelling of analyst name.)

Read the full article →

Foreclosures Pushing Home Prices Down Even Further

October 26, 2010

WASHINGTON — Home prices are falling further, suggesting a bottom hasn’t been reached in many metro areas. Millions of foreclosures are expected to pour onto the market in the coming years. That’s likely to force prices down and hurt even cities that had begun to rebound. Investigations into banks’ foreclosure paperwork could further deter buyers and weigh down prices. The past few months have been the worst time in a decade for the housing market. Few people have bought homes, and among the small pool of buyers, many have purchased foreclosures and other distressed properties. The impact was apparent Tuesday when Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller released its latest index for home prices in 20 major U.S metro areas. The average price for all markets fell 0.2 percent in August and 15 cities posted declines. But the foreclosure problem is far from over. A “shadow inventory” of homes on the verge of foreclosure is bound to force prices lower well into next year. About 2 million loans are in foreclosure, and another 2.4 million borrowers have missed at least 90 days of mortgage payments, according to LPS Applied Analytics. “It’s like a never-ending supply” of homes, said Daniel Alpert, managing partner at the New York investment bank Westwood Capital. He expects prices to fall another 10 percent over the next year – and not improve much after that. Most troubled homeowners are concentrated in cities that have already been battered by the housing bust. One in 15 homeowners in Las Vegas received a foreclosure notice in the first half of the year, according to foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. In the Fort Myers, Fla. metro area, the ratio was one in 20; in the Phoenix metro area it was one in 23. “If you’re going down the hill, you tend to keep going down the hill,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist at real estate data firm CoreLogic. In Las Vegas, prices have fallen 57 percent from the peak four years ago. They are now at the lowest point since spring 2000. In August, they ticked up slightly – 0.1 percent – according to the Case-Shiller report. Investors buying properties to sell or lease have helped to stabilize the nation’s worst housing market. Demand is also coming from retirees, said Paul Bell, a real estate agent with Prudential Americana Group in Las Vegas, who noted that 45 percent of the city’s buyers are paying cash That’s “helping to contribute to a floor” in the city’s home prices, Bell said. Some markets are doing relatively well. Chicago, Washington and New York have been showing consistent price increases since spring, though the pace of those increases faded over the summer. In the nation’s capital, the large number of federal employees and government contract workers have kept the economy strong. New York has seen fewer foreclosures than other cities. California may offer the most complex housing picture. Even though the state’s major cities have started to show weakness, prices are well above the bottom of spring 2009. The San Francisco area’s home prices have surged more than 21 percent since then. Prices in San Diego have risen nearly 14 percent and had increased for 15 consecutive months before falling in August. In Los Angeles they have increased by more than 10 percent in that period. Home prices would have to rise by more than 50 percent in each of the markets to return to their peaks during the housing boom. It’s still unclear how the allegations of lenders using flawed documents to foreclosure on homes will affect housing markets. Bank of America and Ally Financial Inc.’s GMAC Mortgage have started processing foreclosures again, after calling a temporary halt while they reviewed mortgage documents. Some buyers are worried that the sale of a foreclosure could be contested – or even canceled – if the previous owner claims the foreclosure was invalid. In an October survey taken by the National Association of Realtors, about 23 percent of real estate agents said they have a client who is no longer interested in purchasing a foreclosed property due to the foreclosure-document mess.

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (Oct. 3-9)

October 8, 2010

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Charlotte, Chicago, East Bay, Houston, New York City, Northern New Jersey, Phoenix, South Florida and St. Louis. NEW YORK CITY, NORTHERN NEW JERSEY Cassidy Turley Exec David Houston Passes…

Read the full article →

Etrion, Phoenix Solar to build plant in Italy

October 5, 2010

Etrion, Phoenix Solar to build plant in Italy

Read the full article →

Where The Millionaires Make It: States With The Highest Percentage Of Millionaire Households (PHOTOS)

October 4, 2010

After two straight years of declines, the number of millionaires in the U.S. grew by eight percent in 2010, totaling some 5.6 million households, according to Phoenix Marketing International. And while California and New York continue to have the largest number of households worth more than $1 million, neither state even cracked the top five in Phoenix’s 2010 ranking of the U.S. states with the highest percentage of millionaire households. New York boasts 381,197 millionaire households, followed by California, with 716,316, but you have a better chance of meeting a millionaire in less obvious locales like Maryland, Hawaii and Alaska. This is mainly a matter of arithmetic: New York, for instance, has over 10 times more total households than six of the top 15 U.S. states with the highest percentage of millionaire households. As Phoenix points out, the same four states which have topped the company’s annual rankings for the past three years “share some important distinctions: they are small states with large concentrations of highly educated professionals and business owners.” For the fifth straight year in a row, Mississippi has the fewest millionaire households as a percentage of its total population, at 3.22 percent. And the national state average, Phoenix finds, is 4.78 millionaires per 100 households. Rhinebeck, NY-based Phoenix Marketing International defines a millionaire household as one with $1 million or more in investable or liquid assets, excluding real estate. We’ve listed the top 15 states with the highest percentage of millionaires in 2010, according to Phoenix Marketing International’s ranking. Did your state make the list? See below:

Read the full article →

William Tierney and Guilbert Hentschke: Nobody Wins When We Regulate Out of Ignorance

September 30, 2010

For-profit higher education has become a political piñata. Three Senate hearings have produced evidence of deceitful recruitment practices, unsustainable student-debt burdens, fraudulent promises of future jobs and high dropout rates at for-profit colleges. In response, Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, plans to propose legislation after the mid-term elections to curb industry abuses. Some for-profit critics would even like the schools to go away. Like it or not, we’re stuck with for-profit colleges. The roughly 3,000 for-profit colleges and universities now account for 12% of all post-secondary students, and they are closing in on serving 2 million students. Financially strapped public colleges and universities are in no position to absorb a rush of new students should for-profits start closing because of tougher regulation. The problem, lost amid the heated charges of widespread fraud in the industry, is that we too little about for-profit colleges to devise a proper regulatory framework for them. Leaders of traditional and for-profit colleges, locked in a cold war atmosphere for years, have stymied comparative research because they feared that objective data would either illuminate the strengths or demonstrate the weaknesses of for-profit colleges. That has produced some yawning gaps in our knowledge of the fastest-growing sector in higher education. Consider: We have no reliable industry-wide data on how many of the nearly 2 million students who begin classes actually complete a degree or certificate program. What exists, at best, are scattered reports issued by various colleges or sweeping analyses of the entire sector, none of which yield reliable information. More important, there is virtually no research that tells us how for-profits compare in terms of graduation rates with their public- and private-school peers. A 2010 study by the Parthenon Group, an independent research organization, is one of the few that examines this question. Using U.S. Department of Education data from 1996-2001 to look at students seeking two-year degrees or certificates, it found that 65% of the students attending for-profit colleges earned the associate degrees or certificates, compared to 44% at community colleges. Even that data, while encouraging, is hardly sufficient to serve as the foundation of a new regulatory schema. There is no systematic data on how effective for-profit colleges are in helping their graduates land meaningful jobs and on how well they are prepared for them. This question goes to the heart of the proposed “gainful-employment” standard, currently under review by the Department of Education, that would cut federal aid to for-profit schools – a major source of their profits — if student-loan repayment rates fell below a certain level. Draconian rules would no doubt put many for-profit colleges out of business. But the best information we have on the jobs/debt questions is no better than back-of-the-envelope projections. We just don’t know how successful for-profit colleges are in overcoming the educational obstacles posed by students who need remedial classes in, say, math and English. If students are unable to correct their academic deficiencies, they will be unlikely to complete their studies. This is not only a problem in for-profit schools. More than two-thirds of all students in higher education require some remedial classes, but they are disproportionately represented in for-profit colleges, as well as community colleges. It is these students – older and poorer than their four-year public and private school counterparts – who overwhelmingly make up the new populations that must be tapped if we are to turn out more college graduates. They are also the same students most at risk of dropping out and defaulting on their loans. There are some promising signs that the for-profit industry is opening its doors to research that will help fill in our knowledge gaps. Corinthian Colleges and the University of Phoenix have recently agreed to participate in research projects comparing their effectiveness against that of selected public institutions. The Career College Association, which represents 1,500 mostly for-profit colleges and universities, will host a major panel on comparative research at its annual convention next summer. And Kaplan University will share data on student performance with the chancellor’s office of the California Community Colleges. Still, a plea for more research at a time when some critics have likened for-profits to subprime mortgage lenders and called for their extinction might seem quixotic. Yes, protect students from the industry’s worst abuses. But before we construct an ambitious regulatory framework, let’s see if the budding cooperative spirit between traditional colleges and for-profits produces research that could help us devise one based in reality. It is not simply to the benefit of for-profit colleges that they succeed. By some estimates, we need to produce 22 million new degree-holders over the next eight years to meet the demands of our information-based economy. We cannot meet that goal if we over-regulate an industry out of ignorance. William Tierney and Guilbert Hentschke, professors of education at the University of Southern California, are the co-authors of “New Players, Different Games: Understanding the Rise of For-Profit Colleges and Universities.”

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (Sept. 12-18)

September 16, 2010

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Greenville/Spartanburg, Houston, Los Angeles, Phoenix, New York City, South Florida and Westchester. ATLANTA Davis Achieves Executive VP Rank at Grubb Grubb & Ellis Co. promoted…

Read the full article →

Case-Shiller Index: Home Prices Jump In 17 Cities In June, But Housing Outlook Is Grim

August 31, 2010

WASHINGTON — Home prices rose in June for a third straight month as now-expired tax credits inspired a burst of home-buying. But prices are expected to fall through the rest of the year now that demand has faded. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index released Tuesday posted a 1 percent increase in June from May and was up 4.2 percent from a year ago. Seventeen cities showed monthly price gains. Still, the gains were weaker from the previous month in several markets, including San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles. Home prices nationally were up 4.4 percent in the April-to-June quarter. That followed a decline of 2.8 percent in the January-to-March quarter. The jump was largely because buyers could take advantage of government tax credits of up to $8,000. Home sales have dropped sharply since those incentives expired. Lending standards remain tight, unemployment is stuck near double digits and foreclosures are expected to remain at extraordinary levels. “We do not take this report as a signal of future strength,” wrote BNP Paribas economist Yelena Shulyatyeva. She expects the Case-Shiller report to show price declines by August. Economists at IHS Global Insight project home prices will fall by up to 8 percent and hit the bottom sometime next year. The biggest monthly increases in June were in Chicago, Detroit and Minneapolis. Prices rose 2.5 percent in each of those cities. Prices in Seattle and Phoenix were flat. Home prices in Las Vegas fell 0.6 percent. Nationally, prices have risen 6 percent from their April 2009 bottom. But they remain 28 percent below their July 2006 peak. Prices are widely expected to fall in the second half of the year. Sales of previously occupied homes plunged in July to the lowest level in 15 years, despite the lowest mortgage rates in decades and bargain prices in many areas. The inventory of unsold homes on the market has grown. At the current sales pace, it would take more than a year to exhaust the inventory on the market nationwide, compared with a healthy level of about six months. When unsold homes sit on the market, sellers are forced to lower their asking prices. And homeowners looking to trade up may be forced to back out of purchases because they can’t sell their homes. Pam Geller and her husband have been trying to sell their two-bedroom condominium in Los Angeles so they can buy a house. It remains unsold after more than two months on the market, even after the couple lowered the price to $359,000 from $399,000. They’re close to completing the purchase of their next home. But the deal will collapse unless they find a buyer in two weeks. Geller said she’s unwilling to slash the price further. With home prices likely to fall, Geller wonders if it might be better to wait to buy another home. “What I see is houses still dropping” in value, she said. __ AP Real Estate Writer Alex Veiga contributed to this report from Los Angeles. (This version CORRECTS Corrects quarterly increase to 4.4 percent. )

Read the full article →

10 Local American Economies That Have Changed Forever (PHOTOS)

August 25, 2010

By 24/7 Wall St. : A city does not die when its last resident moves away. Death happens when municipalities lose the industries and vital populations that made them important cities. The economy has evolved so much since the middle of the 20th Century that many cities that were among the largest and most vibrant in America have collapsed. Some have lost more than half of their residents. Others have lost the businesses that made them important centers of finance, manufacturing, and commerce. Most of our list of America’s Ten Dead Cities were once major manufacturing hubs and others were important ports or financial services centers. The downfall of one city, New Orleans, began in the 1970s, but was accelerated by Hurricane Katrina. Notably, the rise of inexpensive manufacturing in Japan destroyed the ability of the industrial cities on this list to effectively compete in the global marketplace. Foreign business activity and US government policy were two of the three major blows that caused the downfall of these cities. The third was the labor movement and its demands for higher compensation which ballooned the costs of manufacturing in many of these cities as well. 24/7 Wall St. looked at a number of sources in order to select the list. One was the US Census Bureau’s list of largest cities by population by decade from 1950 to 2000 with estimates for 2007. Detroit, for example, had 1.9 million people in 1950 and was the fifth largest city in the nation. By 2000, the figure was 951,000. The city was not even on the top ten list in 2007. The Census data also describes the shift of much of the population to cities which were not considered large at all in 1950. Most of these are in the southern part of the US. Rising populations in these locations has been driven by the growing number of retired people and a relocation of the nation’s workforce. This is how San Diego, Phoenix, and San Antonio have moved onto the list of the ten largest cities in America. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology did a study of what they described as America’s 150 forgotten cities. The municipalities on their list were medium-sized and ranked by measurements that included poverty. The reason for their demise largely match the cities on the 24/7 Wall St list . The MIT research work goes beyond a mere list of statistics and points out reasons why some of these cities will never recover. In almost every case, tax bases have disappeared, which has undermined the ability of local governments to spend money on revitalization. Abandoned areas of these cities have high crime rates, which not only keeps people from relocating to these areas but is actually an incentive for them to move away. This in turn, leads to the image of these cities as desolate urbanscapes. Check out below the 10 local American economies that have changed forever — and visit 24/7 Wall Street for more information : For more, visit our new Third World America section.

Read the full article →

For-Profit College Shares SINK After Corinthian Revelation

August 20, 2010

NEW YORK — Shares of for-profit schools slid Friday after Corinthian Colleges Inc. said its student loan repayment rates were deteriorating, putting it at risk of losing access to federal financial aid for some programs. The Department of Education can suspend a school’s access to federal financial aid if the default rate is 25 percent or greater for three years in a row. That aid makes up the bulk of for-profit education companies’ revenue. A DOE study released last Friday showed Corinthian students repay loans at one of the lowest rates among those who attend publicly traded companies’ schools. Corinthian offered a first-quarter forecast Friday that fell below analyst expectations and said it was unable to forecast its fiscal 2011 performance because of uncertainty about the impacts of regulatory changes and its decision to limit student enrollments to improve graduation and loan repayment rates. Its shares tumbled 86 cents, or 16 percent, to $4.54 in Friday afternoon trading. The stock, which has lost two-thirds of its value in2010, had not traded below $5 between August 2000 and this week. Corinthian’s bad news pulled down other stock in other for-profit education companies, many of which have made changes to accommodate new regulation and lawmakers’ concerns. For-profit education companies’ shares have fallen this year as regulators and lawmakers address soaring student loan defaults, aggressive recruiting by enrollment counselors and concerns about the quality of education the companies provide. Corinthian expects that the number of its schools with student loan default rates above 25 percent will be “substantially higher” for students beginning to pay in 2009 fiscal year than for the 2008 group. Up to three of the company’s schools could become ineligible with the 2009 data, joining 49 already ineligible, Corinthian said. The company also said it is stopping enrollment of students more likely to default on loans and drop out, who make up 15 percent of its student population. Corinthian expects this change to result in flat new student growth for the year, down substantially from the double-digit growth of the last few years. The company said Friday that it expects first-quarter net income between 38 cents and 41 cents a share. Analysts had predicted net income of 45 cents per share. Several companies have cut their outlooks when reporting quarterly results recently, saying regulatory changes and efforts to improve the school experience for students will slow enrollments. The sector’s biggest decliners were Education Management Corp. and Lincoln Educational Services, which both tumbled 5 percent. DeVry Inc., ITT Educational Services Inc. and Career Education Corp. slid about 4 percent. Bridgepoint Education Inc. fell 3 percent, while Strayer Education Inc., Capella Education Co. and Grand Canyon Education Inc. all shed about 1 percent. Apollo Group Inc., which owns the largest school chain in the country, the University of Phoenix, fell 18 cents to $40.41.

Read the full article →

Video: Blue Phoenix’s Licata Likes Hess, Sees Asset Sales at BP: Video

July 28, 2010

July 28 (Bloomberg) — John Licata, chief commodity strategist at Blue Phoenix Inc., discusses his investment strategy in Hess Corp. and BP Plc. Licata talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

In The Pipeline: CoStar Development and Construction News for July 25-31

July 26, 2010

In this week’s Pipeline, the Ak-Chin Indian Community and general contractor PENTA Building Group break ground on $20 million expansion of a Harrah’s Casino south of Phoenix; a Denver-based electrical contractor completes a new design-build $64 million…

Read the full article →

10 Cities Where Sellers SLASHED Home Prices In June (PHOTOS)

July 17, 2010

If you’re looking for a home in Boston, Phoenix Baltimore, Dallas or Minneapolis, we have some good news. For the second month in a row, home sellers are cutting prices in droves in these cities, according to Trulia , which maintains one of the most comprehensive real estate sites on the web. “Buyers definitely have the upper hand in negotiations this season,” said Trulia’s co-founder and CEO Pete Flint, in a statement announcing this month’s price reduction report. As of July 1, 24 percent of listings on the market have experienced at least one price reduction, a nine percent increase from the previous month. On the whole, price reductions have become more frequent during the past few months, fueled by the expiration of the federal first-time home buyer tax credit. This July, 22 out of 50 of the largest U.S. cities had at least 30 percent of homes reduced in price, compared to 10 cities last month, Trulia reports. Nationally, the average price reduction was 10 percent. Check out the U.S. cities in which the largest percentage of home sellers are cutting prices — and visit Trulia for more information . (Katerina Stamatiou contributed to this report)

Read the full article →

Cole Acquires City Center Plaza for $310 Million

July 13, 2010

In one of the largest real estate transactions of 2010, Cole Credit Property Trust III Inc., a non-traded real-estate investment trust managed by Cole Real Estate Investment of Phoenix, purchased the City Center Plaza from Beacon Capital Partners for…

Read the full article →

Weider Global Nutrition Moves Global Headquarters to Phoenix

July 12, 2010

PHOENIX, AZ–(Marketwire – July 12, 2010) –   Weider Global Nutrition, a health and wellness nutrition company, has moved its global corporate headquarters to Phoenix, Ariz., a business climate favorable to existing employees and attracting new talent in all areas of operations.

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (July 4-10)

July 8, 2010

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas, Milwaukee/Madison, Orange County, Phoenix, Portland, South Florida and Washington, DC. WASHINGTON, DC Avison Young Buys NoVa Firm; Taps 2 to Head New Branch Toronto…

Read the full article →

Video: Licata, Robotti See BP’s Tony Hayward Being Replaced: Video

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Robert Robotti, president of Robotti & Company LLC, and John Licata, chief investment strategist with Blue Phoenix Inc., talk about prospects for Tony Hayward to remain as chief executive officer of BP Plc. Robotti and Licata say they see Hayward being replaced. Licata says Hayward’s “days are numbered.” They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (This is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Video: Licata, Robotti See BP’s Tony Hayward Being Replaced: Video

June 18, 2010

June 18 (Bloomberg) — Robert Robotti, president of Robotti & Company LLC, and John Licata, chief investment strategist with Blue Phoenix Inc., talk about prospects for Tony Hayward to remain as chief executive officer of BP Plc. Robotti and Licata say they see Hayward being replaced. Licata says Hayward’s “days are numbered.” They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (This is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

CoStar’s People of Note (June 13-19)

June 17, 2010

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Charlotte, Chicago, Inland Empire, Jacksonville, Los Angeles, Raleigh, Phoenix and Tampa. CHARLOTTE, TAMPA, SOUTHEAST Grubb Recruits 2 to Expand Office Presence in SE Randy Buddemeyer (pictured…

Read the full article →

Merckle Drug Wholesaler Phoenix Said to Be Near $4.4 Billion Funding Deal

June 16, 2010

By Aaron Kirchfeld and Angela Cullen June 16 (Bloomberg) — Phoenix Group , the indebted drug wholesaler started by deceased billionaire Adolf Merckle , is close to obtaining as much as 3.6 billion euros ($4.4 billion) in financing, said two people familiar with the negotiations. Phoenix, based in Mannheim, Germany, may reach an agreement with banks by early next month on 2.6 billion euros in syndicated loans to refinance existing debt, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The company also has plans to sell as much as 1 billion euros in hybrid bonds, according to these people. The deal marks the final chapter in the downfall of Merckle, who committed suicide in January 2009 after wrong-way bets on the stock market that brought companies spanning the cement and drug industries to the brink of collapse. His death left son and sole heir, Ludwig, to negotiate new loans with the family’s lenders and divest assets. A spokesman for Phoenix, Olaf Teichert, couldn’t be immediately reached for comment by phone or by e-mail. Ludwig Merckle ’s spokeswoman couldn’t immediately comment. Merckle agreed to sell generic-drug maker Ratiopharm GmbH to Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. in March for 3.63 billion euros. He also sold part of his stake in HeidelbergCement AG and Swiss drugmaker Mepha Gruppe in the last 12 months. As part of the refinancing plan, Ludwig Merckle agreed to inject 500 million euros in cash and repay a loan to Phoenix, they said. Merckle’s VEM Vermoegensverwaltung GmbH investment vehicle borrowed as much as 500 million euros from Phoenix as the family patriarch sought to stem his losses, the people said. The refinancing is aimed at bolstering Phoenix’s credit standing as it considers selling as much as 25 percent of Phoenix in an initial public offering in the next year, one of the people said. Phoenix may also sell smaller assets valued at less than 200 million euros, the other person said. To contact the reporter on this story: Aaron Kirchfeld in Frankfurt at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net ; To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Cullen in Frankfurt at acullen8@bloomberg.net ;

Read the full article →

`Investor Resistance’ Lifts Municipal Bond Yields to Highest in Four Weeks

June 11, 2010

By Allison Bennett and Brendan A. McGrail June 11 (Bloomberg) — Municipal bond yields rose two days in a row for the first time in a month, reaching a four-week high, as investors refrained from buying in hopes of better returns. Yields on top-rated tax-exempts maturing in 2020 jumped 2 basis points to 3.15 percent yesterday, the highest since May 13, after rising 1 basis point the day before. They last rose on consecutive trading days May 7 and May 10, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. “The issue is absolute yields are so low, so you’re seeing a lot of investor resistance,” said Alan Schankel , a managing director at Philadelphia-based Janney Montgomery Scott LLC. “There are a lot of bonds in dealers’ inventory because it’s hard to move them with such absolute lows.” Municipal borrowers offered $9.2 billion in debt this week, almost twice as much as the previous period, according to Bloomberg data. Top-rated, 10-year municipal bonds yielded more than 98 percent of equivalent-maturity Treasuries on June 9. A day earlier, the ratio climbed above 99 percent, the highest since May 18, 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Municipals have averaged 93 percent of Treasury yields since the beginning of May. “The nominal yields, even though attractive compared to Treasuries percentage-wise, there was a lot of reluctance to participate at this level,” said Tom Boylen , a managing director and municipal-bond trader in Chicago for BMO Capital Markets. “We’re going to have a somewhat illiquid environment in munis in the short run, until we get levels that are palatable.” Money Flow Yields on top-rated, 10-year general obligations sagged to a two-month low on May 25. Money flowed into long-term municipal bond mutual funds, the largest institutional holders of state and local obligations, for five consecutive weeks through June 2, according to data released June 9 by the Investment Company Institute , a Washington-based trade group. Fund investors added a net $869 million in the period ended June 2, compared with $458 million the previous period, the institute’s data show. Connecticut , whose credit rating was downgraded one level to AA by Fitch Ratings last week, reduced a $600 million bond offer by 19 percent on June 9. The state with the highest tax-supported debt per capita lowered a refinancing issue to $258.2 million from $400 million, alongside $200 million in new borrowing. Connecticut’s five-year securities were priced to yield 2.03 percent on June 9, 29 basis points above top-rated general obligation debt, according to a daily survey by Concord, Massachusetts-based Municipal Market Advisors. Bond Yields The last time Connecticut came to market, in April, five- year bonds yielded 1.93 percent, 9 basis points above the MMA index. “The Fitch downgrade didn’t help, but I think it is more a sloppy market,” Schankel said. The state had $13.7 billion of bonds outstanding before the sale, according to New York-based Fitch. Yields on the state’s 10-year general obligations have risen 2 basis points since the report, according to Bloomberg Fair Market Value data. Christine Shaw, a spokeswoman for the state treasurer’s office, and JPMorgan Chase & Co., leading the group marketing the deal, didn’t return calls seeking comment. Following are descriptions of pending sales of municipal debt in the U.S.: UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA, spread over four campuses in the Phoenix area, plans to offer $146.7 million in revenue bonds as soon as next week for construction of a health science building. The notes will be issued through the Arizona Board of Regents, the governing body for the state’s three public universities, with the sale split into $139.2 million in Build America Bonds and $7.5 million in tax-exempts. JPMorgan Chase will lead the group marketing the securities. (Added June 11) MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL BUILDING AUTHORITY , which finances school construction in the state, plans to sell $151 million in Qualified School Construction Bonds for renovations as soon as next week. The debt is backed by state sales taxes. The securities mature in 2027 and will be marketed by a group led by Barclays Plc. (Added June 11) LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT, which operates nine campuses in the second-largest U.S. city, plans to issue $1.2 billion in debt as soon as next week. The offering, to be backed by the full faith and credit of the district, is non-callable and will be split into Build America Bonds and tax-exempts. The proceeds will be used to build and renovate schools. Some proceeds will go to pre-paying $300 million in bond anticipation notes. Citigroup Inc. will lead a group marketing the debt. (Added June 10) SAN ANTONIO, the seventh most-populous U.S. city, plans to issue $250.8 million in debt as soon as next week. The offering is split into $201.9 million of Build America Bonds, $9.5 million of tax-exempts and $39.4 million of combination tax and revenue certificates of obligation. Proceeds of the sale will go toward improvements of streets, bridges and public spaces. The Texas city is rated AAA, the highest, by all three rating companies. The securities will be marketed by a group led by Citigroup. (Added June 9) To contact the reporters on this story: Allison Bennett in New York at abennett23@bloomberg.net ; Brendan A. McGrail in New York at bmcgrail@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

British Airways Crew Resume Strike as Walsh Prepares for Berlin Meeting

June 5, 2010

By Steve Rothwell June 5 (Bloomberg) — British Airways Plc ’s 12,000 cabin crew began another five-day strike today, the latest walkout in a 16-month dispute over staffing levels, pay and travel perks. With no resolution in sight, Europe’s third-biggest carrier has already grounded flights on 17 days since March 20, 14 more than during the last stoppage by flight attendants in 1997. The most recent talks with the Unite union failed on June 1 and further negotiations may be stalled by Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh ’s trip to Germany to attend the annual gathering of the International Air Transportation Association . “Both sides are already quite entrenched and with Walsh in Berlin in coming days, prospects for any resumption of talks seem very thin,” said Frank Skodzik , an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt with an “add” rating on British Airways stock. Passenger traffic at British Airways tumbled almost 12 percent last month after the walkout forced it to ground flights and rebook passengers with rivals. The strikes have so far cost the carrier about 126 million pounds ($183 million), including today’s stoppage, based on its own estimates. “The numbers of crew reporting for work at Heathrow has been higher than we expected and as a result we have been able to operate additional flights to Los Angeles, Washington, Mexico City and Phoenix,” spokeswoman Sophie Greenyer said today. “We will continue to operate 100 percent of our schedule at Gatwick and London City airports and our cabin crew at Gatwick continue to ignore Unite’s strike calls and work as normal.” No talks with the union are scheduled, she said. Fresh Talks There are “no talks planned or developments to report,” Unite spokeswoman Pauline Doyle said today. While British Airways remains in touch with the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service, the U.K.’s state-funded mediator, no fresh discussions have been arranged, ACAS spokesman Richard Goodfellow said yesterday by telephone. British Airways said June 1 it will operate more than 80 percent of long-haul flights from its London Heathrow base during the current five-day strike, an increase from 60 percent of services at the start of the current series of walkouts on May 24. “We will be flying a full schedule of flights to South Africa this week ahead of the World Cup kick-off and aim to fly to more than 85 percent of our long-haul destinations,” Greenyer said today. “We will continue to look to add to this schedule where we can.” The two sides have been discussing changes to staffing levels and future pay grades for more than a year. The current dispute flared up in November, when Walsh cut crew numbers on long-haul flights without the union’s approval. About 600 airlines executives are scheduled to travel to Berlin this weekend to attend IATA’s 66th annual meeting, which begins on June 7. To contact the reporter on this story: Steven Rothwell in London at srothwell@bloomberg.net

Read the full article →

Copper Demand May Weaken as China Curbs Its Economy, Freeport, Codelco Say

June 3, 2010

By Matt Craze and Sara Eisen June 3 (Bloomberg) — Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc . and Codelco, the world’s two largest copper producers, said China’s plans to curb its economy threaten to reduce demand for the metal after prices slumped 15 percent in two months. The copper market will be “volatile” for as much as another year after China took measures to cool its property market, Codelco Chief Executive Officer Diego Hernandez said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg headquarters in New York. The Asian nation is a “risk to the world’s market place in the near term,” Freeport CEO Richard Adkerson said in an interview. Chinese policy makers are trimming stimulus measures this year after a $1.4 trillion lending binge revived growth in 2009. Officials are targeting a 22 percent reduction in new loans and have sold bills and raised banks’ reserve requirements to suck money out of the financial system. Copper has slumped from a 20- month high in April on concerns about global economic growth. “In the short term, we are subject to the volatility of the world economy,” said Hernandez, a former head of BHP Billiton Ltd.’s base metals business who became chief executive of state-owned Codelco, based in Santiago, last month. Emerging market demand “could slow down for a while,” he said. Equity and commodities have slumped on speculation that Europe’s debt crisis will spread, hurting global economic growth. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials dropped 8.2 percent last month, the most since November 2008. Copper futures for July delivery dropped 3.6 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $3.0045 a pound on the Comex in New York at 8:59 a.m., down for a fourth straight session. Manufacturing Slowed Reports June 1 showed the rate of manufacturing gains slowed in China and the U.S., the world’s biggest copper users. European factory-output growth slowed more than previously estimated last month, figures showed yesterday. Copper prices in New York dropped 7.4 percent in May, the most since January. “China is cooling from very strong levels, the European recovery threatens to stall, and the U.S. is leveling out,” said David Thurtell , an analyst at Citigroup Inc. in London. China is seeking to limit inflation to about 3 percent this year and said May 13 it will crack down on price speculation and hoarding in some food commodities to reach the target. Consumer prices jumped 2.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 18 months. “It’s positive” that China’s government is working to minimize inflation, Adkerson told Bloomberg Television today in an interview. “It will likely lead to a more sustainable situation going forward.” Expansion Plans Still, both companies are investing in expansion plans in expectation of rising future demand in China and other emerging economies. Combined, they account for about a fifth of global output of copper, which is used in plumbing and wiring. Codelco will invest $15 billion over the next five years to revamp production at its aging mines, Hernandez said. Production will rise to over 2 million tons a year from about 1.7 million tons through the increased spending, he said. Freeport, based in Phoenix, will spend $100 million this year to explore for copper and gold after cutting back on investments in 2009 amid concern over the world economy, Adkerson said in April. China, India and other emerging economies need copper “for their growth, urbanization, programs that they have and I don’t see how that could stop,” Hernandez said. Freeport rose $2.53, or 3.8 percent, to $69.02 as of 9:26 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock has dropped about 14 percent this year. To contact the reporters on this story: Matt Craze in Santiago at mcraze@bloomberg.net or Sara Eisen in New York at

Read the full article →

Copper Demand May Weaken as China Curbs Its Economy, Freeport, Codelco Say

June 3, 2010

By Matt Craze and Sara Eisen June 3 (Bloomberg) — Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc . and Codelco, the world’s two largest copper producers, said China’s plans to curb its economy threaten to reduce demand for the metal after prices slumped 15 percent in two months. The copper market will be “volatile” for as much as another year after China took measures to cool its property market, Codelco Chief Executive Officer Diego Hernandez said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg headquarters in New York. The Asian nation is a “risk to the world’s market place in the near term,” Freeport CEO Richard Adkerson said in an interview. Chinese policy makers are trimming stimulus measures this year after a $1.4 trillion lending binge revived growth in 2009. Officials are targeting a 22 percent reduction in new loans and have sold bills and raised banks’ reserve requirements to suck money out of the financial system. Copper has slumped from a 20- month high in April on concerns about global economic growth. “In the short term, we are subject to the volatility of the world economy,” said Hernandez, a former head of BHP Billiton Ltd.’s base metals business who became chief executive of state-owned Codelco, based in Santiago, last month. Emerging market demand “could slow down for a while,” he said. Equity and commodities have slumped on speculation that Europe’s debt crisis will spread, hurting global economic growth. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials dropped 8.2 percent last month, the most since November 2008. Copper futures for July delivery dropped 3.6 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $3.0045 a pound on the Comex in New York at 8:59 a.m., down for a fourth straight session. Manufacturing Slowed Reports June 1 showed the rate of manufacturing gains slowed in China and the U.S., the world’s biggest copper users. European factory-output growth slowed more than previously estimated last month, figures showed yesterday. Copper prices in New York dropped 7.4 percent in May, the most since January. “China is cooling from very strong levels, the European recovery threatens to stall, and the U.S. is leveling out,” said David Thurtell , an analyst at Citigroup Inc. in London. China is seeking to limit inflation to about 3 percent this year and said May 13 it will crack down on price speculation and hoarding in some food commodities to reach the target. Consumer prices jumped 2.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 18 months. “It’s positive” that China’s government is working to minimize inflation, Adkerson told Bloomberg Television today in an interview. “It will likely lead to a more sustainable situation going forward.” Expansion Plans Still, both companies are investing in expansion plans in expectation of rising future demand in China and other emerging economies. Combined, they account for about a fifth of global output of copper, which is used in plumbing and wiring. Codelco will invest $15 billion over the next five years to revamp production at its aging mines, Hernandez said. Production will rise to over 2 million tons a year from about 1.7 million tons through the increased spending, he said. Freeport, based in Phoenix, will spend $100 million this year to explore for copper and gold after cutting back on investments in 2009 amid concern over the world economy, Adkerson said in April. China, India and other emerging economies need copper “for their growth, urbanization, programs that they have and I don’t see how that could stop,” Hernandez said. Freeport rose $2.53, or 3.8 percent, to $69.02 as of 9:26 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock has dropped about 14 percent this year. To contact the reporters on this story: Matt Craze in Santiago at mcraze@bloomberg.net or Sara Eisen in New York at

Read the full article →